Red White Shrimp

I'd like to add some of these shrimp to one of my planted tanks (45 gallon) housing 2 rams, 8 tetras and red tail shark and a couple of corys. Will they be ok in that community? And how many can I add? Thanks

As stated above, remove the red tailed shark as it would eat the shrimp. These shrimp are called Crystal Red Shrimp and are extremely delicate. They require low TDS, yet mineralized water, and also a low pH, with 6.2-6.4 being ideal. They are also very finicky about temperature, 68-78 is what they can tolerate, with 74-75 being best. These shrimp are not for beginners. If these are your first shrimp, they are almost guaranteed to die in your tank. Red Rili shrimp are a good alternative, as they are very hardy shrimp, and can live in most tanks (as long as none of the fish eat them). Your tank could likely house 100+ Red Rili shrimp without issues.

As stated above, remove the red tailed shark as it would eat the shrimp. These shrimp are called Crystal Red Shrimp and are extremely delicate. They require low TDS, yet mineralized water, and also a low pH, with 6.2-6.4 being ideal. They are also very finicky about temperature, 68-78 is what they can tolerate, with 74-75 being best. These shrimp are not for beginners. If these are your first shrimp, they are almost guaranteed to die in your tank. Red Rili shrimp are a good alternative, as they are very hardy shrimp, and can live in most tanks (as long as none of the fish eat them). Your tank could likely house 100+ Red Rili shrimp without issues.

As stated above, remove the red tailed shark as it would eat the shrimp. These shrimp are called Crystal Red Shrimp and are extremely delicate. They require low TDS, yet mineralized water, and also a low pH, with 6.2-6.4 being ideal. They are also very finicky about temperature, 68-78 is what they can tolerate, with 74-75 being best. These shrimp are not for beginners. If these are your first shrimp, they are almost guaranteed to die in your tank. Red Rili shrimp are a good alternative, as they are very hardy shrimp, and can live in most tanks (as long as none of the fish eat them). Your tank could likely house 100+ Red Rili shrimp without issues.